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WE HAVE A BETTER SHOT AT IMMORTALITY THESE days than we've ever had before--not literal immortality, of course, or the biological immortality that results from perpetuating our genes through procreation, but the lesser immortality that comes from leaving at least some mark for generations to come that says, "I was here, and this is who I was" For much of human history, only eminent artists or thinkers or public figures could hope to have their names live on in this way. But a canvass of the culture reveals that, in at least two ways, the kind of immortality that once was the preserve of the greats is now being democratized. Or so it is said.

Thanks to the Internet, claims D. Raj Reddy, a professor of computer science and robotics at Carnegie Mellon University, the possibility of "virtual immortality" is now available to everyone. Anyone can post material on the World Wide Web, and because the Web is impervious to the degradation that time inflicts on printed records, whatever it contains has the capacity to exist indefinitely in some form. True, Web sites currently disappear with alarming frequency, and so Professor Reddy might be overstating matters when he says that "we can feel confident" that our Web postings will become part of the "permanent record of the human race: But if what he says isn't true of every single Web site at this early moment in the Web's history, it's certainly true that, in principle and for the first time, the Internet offers the technological means whereby anyone can keep his or her work universally accessible indefinitely. That's why bloggers--those who on a regular basis post their autobiographical narratives, political musings, photos, and poetry online--so often express the inchoate hope that the Internet will allow them, as blogger Radley Balko puts it, to leave "their mark on the world" and achieve a kind of immortality (Balko, a 30-year-old "writer, editor, and wonk living in Alexandria, Virginia," currently gets a respectable 8,000 visits a day on his blogsite, theagitator.com). Blogger Joshua …